Many thanks for your generosity, JAAP.

Saturday, May 1, 2021

Benjamin Frankel - Clarinet Chamber Music (Paul Dean; etc.)


Information

Composer: Benjamin Frankel
  • (01) Clarinet Quintet, Op. 28
  • (04) Clarinet Trio, Op. 10
  • (08) Clarinet Trio No. 2, Op. 41, "Pezzi pianissimi"
  • (12) Bagatelles, Op. 35, "Pezzi notturni"
  • (17) Early Morning Music

Paul Dean, clarinet
Australian String Quartet
Queensland Symphony Chamber Players

Date: 1995
Label: cpo

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Review

An important and rewarding issue. Although four of the symphonies are available and two more, Nos. 4 and 6, have just been released, hardly a note of Frankel’s chamber music has been put on record. The Fifth String Quartet was briefly available on LP (Columbia, 10/67 – nla) but the Clarinet Quintet, in a performance from Thea King and the Britten Quartet, is his only current representation on the Gramophone Database. Listening to these pieces brought to mind MEO’s words concerning the Second Symphony (CPO, 8/96) – “There are no notes wasted here on rhetoric; the rigour of Frankel’s thematic working intensifies the music’s eloquence.” The Clarinet Quintet, written in 1956 for Thea King in memory of her late husband, the celebrated Frederick Thurston, is, as always with this composer, beautifully wrought and eloquent; its intelligent, civilized discourse gives unfailing pleasure. I returned to this and the Bagatelles immediately after playing them and expect to do so again as soon as these lines are sent off.

The Trio for clarinet, cello and piano is a much earlier piece, dating from 1940, yet it finds his distinctive musical language already in place, and anyone who knows Frankel’s music would recognize his fingerprints. The music always moves with an apparently effortless ease. Frankel’s upbringing in the world of popular music and film music ensured a fluency that has often inhibited listeners from discerning the deeper currents that flow under the surface. There is no mistaking them in the Bagatelles for 11 instruments, which date from 1959, the year in which Frankel suffered a heart attack. Here there are some melodic cross-references to the First Symphony from the previous year and depth and seriousness are most strongly in evidence in the final Largamente, whose opening inhabits a world not dissimilar to the last movement of the symphony. Like the latter it is serial but not atonal, much in the same way as Frank Martin: indeed the last movement strikes much the same resonance as the Swiss master. The thoughtful Pezzi pianissimi (1965) also strike a darker and more serious note. The CD ends with a set of three pieces from 1948. Early Morning Music, whose titles (“Too Early”, “Breakfast Cackle” and “Unwillingly to Work”) admirably convey their slight but pleasing character.

All these performances are highly musicianly and extremely accomplished throughout and Paul Dean proves an eloquent and expert player. Thea King obviously has special claims in the Quintet and, incidentally, took part (with Eleanor Warren and the composer) in the first performance of the Pezzi pianissimi. It goes without saying that this excellently balanced disc not only fills an important gap in the current catalogue but, more to the point, offers valuable musical rewards. Strongly recommended.

-- Robert Layton, Gramophone

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Benjamin Frankel (31 January 1906 – 12 February 1973) was a British composer. His best known pieces include a cycle of 5 string quartets, 8 symphonies, and concertos for violin and viola. He was also notable for writing over 100 film scores and working as a big band arranger in the 1930s. During the last 15 years of his life, Frankel also developed his own style of 12-note composition which retained contact with tonality. In the years following his death, Frankel's works were almost completely neglected, until Thea King's landmark recording of the Clarinet Quintet was published, follow by his complete oeuvre on CPO.

***

Paul Dean (born 1966) is an Australian clarinetist, composer and conductor.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

FLAC, tracks
Links in comment
Enjoy!

1 comment:

  1. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Skip Ad' (or 'Get link').
    If you are asked to download or install anything, IGNORE, only download from file hosting site (mega.nz).
    If MEGA shows 'Bandwidth Limit Exceeded' message, try to create a free account.

    http://fumacrom.com/9Lnp
    or
    https://uii.io/AfWzA
    or
    https://exe.io/RYjul7I

    ReplyDelete